*****Top 10 bands/artists from the British Invasion****

Mr. Met

So Amazin
BGOL Investor
This one is for str8 music heads.

Don't front this was the shit.

We know they had their influences, but these are the best ones that came to the US and just took shit over.


The Lovin' Spoonful
The Beatles (G.O.A.T.)
Donovan
The Monkees
Dusty Springfield
Manfred Mann
The Moody Blues
The Rolling Stones
The Troggs
The Kinks
 
The Monkees weren't British, they were an answer to the British invasion. Only the little guy was British.

You left out Queen and Led Zeppelin.
 
GREAT band with a big beat that actually outsold The Beatles in England in '64 (and had nearly 20 American hits). They were the 2nd British band to follow The Beatles onto The Ed Sullivan Show (making numerous appearances) and into stateside fame (up through '67).

They were also supposedly bumped from a deserved Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame induction last year in favor of Grandmaster Flash, despite getting the required votes. The "Hall" wanted to finally induct a rap act at all costs.

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Fuck what Blunt says, the British Invasion includes everybody from The Beatles up to and including Amy Winehouse.
But my list is as follows (I'll exclude the Jimi Hendrix Experience although I shouldn't)

The Beatles
Led Zepplin
The Cream
The Animals
The Them (Van Morrison's original band, can be heard on Brown Eyed Girl)
The Rolling Stones (Brown Sugar, baby!)
Moody Blues
The Who (I only really like My Generation)
Steve Winwood
Joe Cocker - I Get By With A Little Help From My Friends, a Beatles song that he owns now.
 
Fuck what Blunt says, the British Invasion includes everybody from The Beatles up to and including Amy Winehouse.

Uhhh, no. His list referred to the ORIGINAL "British Invasion" ('64-'65) from which the term was coined. There've been a few other times when there was a flurry of British acts succeeding over here, though never as dramatically as back then. It was an unprecedented onslaught.

If you just wanna list every British act that ever made it in the U.S. then you could go on forever.

(BTW, Van Morrison and Them were from Ireland.)

:smh:

And don't forget Herman's Hermits!!! (Anything and everything with a British accent was ultra-successful in the USA for a few years there.)

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ya man how you forget Led Zep. Gods of rock!!
some dont know but the later yardbirds group actually evolved into led zep.
 
Since he needs to know:

The British Isles (Britain, Albion etc) are made up of several hundred islands, which include the one that England, Wales and Scotland are on and the one that Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland are on. It is technically correct to refer to Ireland as part of Britain. The Romans did, the Vikings did, and contemporary geographers do.

The Them are from Northern Ireland, the six provinces that had (at least at Independence) a protestant majority (read people who descended from Scottish, English and Welsh settlers). That means Van Morrison carries a passport in the name of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - making him as British as David Beckham or the Beatles.

By the way, stop stretching.

Oh and to everybody else, is it me or is Queen's guitarist Brian May one of the quiet guitar gods? I heard Another One Bites The Dust and We are the Champions back to back yesterday and he could play rhythm and lead and had a sweeet sense of timing. I gotta get me some Queen.
 
The British Invasion lasted well into the 70's in my opinion

- The Beatles
- The Rolling Stones
- Led Zepplin
- Queen
- The Who
- AC/DC
- Genesis
- Cream
- Moody Blues
- Judas Priest
 
Can't let these dudes go by without a mention...

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BTW...
Though they're not Brits, got to see RUSH at MSG last week. I remember the days when I could count the number of Black folks (other than myself) at rock concerts in MSG.

Brothas and Sistas were out for RUSH. And some were couples too. Never would see that shit in a large arena even 20 years ago.
Black Rockers are coming out of the closet.


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I'm gonna include this band in the top 10..... Yeah, I know in terms of overall record sales they wouldn't make the British top 10 worldwide but in term of their influence and popularity in the USA and worldwide amongst black soul music lovers they were an extremely massive hit.

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Since he needs to know:

The Them are from Northern Ireland, the six provinces that had (at least at Independence) a protestant majority (read people who descended from Scottish, English and Welsh settlers). That means Van Morrison carries a passport in the name of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - making him as British as David Beckham or the Beatles.

You're an idiot. Tell a Northern Irishman (or an IRA member) that he's British and he'll kill you. U2 aren't gonna call themselves "British" either.

Everyone understands that the "British Invasion" was about England (and specific areas of it), not about Northern Ireland. Them were not technically part of what is commonly known as the "British Invasion" ('64-'67), though they did certainly come through that open door and had a couple of minor U.S. hits in the second-half of '65. They were lumped in with all of those other British acts for marketing purposes, but were quite independent of them. Their biggest hits were in the U.K. They never really conquered the U.S. (though their songs grew in stature as time went on).

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Queen's first album first album came out in '73 and Led Zeppelin came out in '68, it's close enough. Naming all of the artists from the mid-sixties era doesn't make them good.
 
By 1962, encouraged by the anyone-can-play populism of skiffle and self-schooled in the music of Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Eddie Cochran, Buddy Holly, James Brown, and Muddy Waters, some British teens developed a real feel for the rock-and-roll and American blues idioms. Blending that with such local traditions as music hall, pop, and Celtic folk, they formulated original music they could claim, play, and sing with conviction. Young groups with electric guitars began performing and writing up-tempo melodic pop, fiery rock and roll, and Chicago-style electric blues. The rebellious tone and image of American rock and roll and blues musicians also deeply resonated with British youth in the late 1950s, influencing all the British Invasion artists.

Rock swept Britain. By 1964, Greater London could claim The Rolling Stones, The Yardbirds, The Who, The Kinks, The Pretty Things, Dusty Springfield, The Dave Clark Five, Peter and Gordon, Chad and Jeremy, John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, and Manfred Mann. Manchester had The Hollies, Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, Freddie and the Dreamers, Davy Jones of The Monkees, and Herman's Hermits; Newcastle was home to The Animals; and Birmingham had The Spencer Davis Group (featuring Steve Winwood) and The Moody Blues. Bands sprang up from Belfast (Them, with frontman Van Morrison), to St Albans (The Zombies), to Essex (The Tremeloes), with more inventive artists arriving to keep the syles moving forward, including The Small Faces, The Move, The Creation, The Troggs, Donovan, and John's Children.
 
You know, I'm not going to bother. It would be pointless to argue with Blunt. You just lost one of the few people who gave you time on BGOL.

Talking about British Invasion, who's hip to John McLaughlin and Dave Holland?
 
Queen's first album first album came out in '73 and Led Zeppelin came out in '68, it's close enough. Naming all of the artists from the mid-sixties era doesn't make them good.

"The British Invasion" refers to a specific time in music when British imports DOMINATED the American charts (for the first and most impactful time). That would be the early Beatles era, '64-'67. The Beatles had 14 songs in the Top 100 at one point in '64 and several other Brit acts had major hits on the charts at the same time!! British acts continued to flow in after that, but they weren't specifically part of that particular ground-breaking initial influx. The original poster referred to acts from that early period when the term "British Invasion" was originally coined (not the late-'60s through the '00s).
 
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